Tag: Ogun

  • Our battles with reptiles, rodents, mosquitoes, harsh weather

    Our battles with reptiles, rodents, mosquitoes, harsh weather

    In spite of successive governments’ promises and programmes aimed at providing mass and affordable houses for Nigerians, the Bureau of Public Service Reform (BPSR) early in the year said that out of the 170 million people in the country, 108 million are technically homeless. This ugly development is no doubt responsible for the self- help the poor masses seem to have adopted to provide shelter for themselves. The result is the proliferation of ramshackle buildings in many parts of the country. INNOCENT DURU, who visited some suburbs of Lagos and Ogun states, examines the health, environmental and security risks that owners and occupants of these makeshift structures are exposed to.

    SHELTER is conventionally regarded as one of the basic necessities of life. But for several landlords in the suburbs of Lagos and Ogun states, living in their own houses comes with enormous pains. Many of the houses are without doors, windows, toilets or bathrooms. Some others are tucked inside bushes where they are forced to mix with reptiles, rodents and other dangerous animals invading their homes on a daily basis.

    A landlord at Odogunyan area of Ikorodu, Lagos, who identified himself simply as Samuel, said: “Life for most of us who live in this kind of structure is an emergency. We became landlords by emergency and also turned into emergency hunters because of the unsolicited visitors we have to entertain from time to time, especially reptiles and rodents. Soldier ants are our doctors and nurses because they come from time to time to inject us. In fact, we do emergency defecation and bathing because you don’t want people to catch you doing it openly, but it is the norm here.

    “Many of us are living the kind of lifestyles we never lived as tenants because we had everything in the rented houses. We are only consoled by the fact that we own the buildings. But how long would one continue to live in the Stone Age because the money is not there to perfect the building? That is the problem,”

    Investigation conducted by our correspondent showed that a good number of the landlords were forced into building shanty one- room houses because they couldn’t cope with rent in the cities.

    Ayobami, who owns one of such houses at Mowo on the Lagos/Badagry Expressway, said: “Most of us built these houses on emergency because rent was always rising and landlords would not listen to excuses. Flood, family problems and other forms of crises also force some people to quit their rented apartments.

    “Some of us begin by living in ordinary tents because there is no money to start building immediately. Some others who could not live in tents constructed wooden houses, while some lived in containers (cubicles made with iron and pan) until they are able to get money to start building the one-room apartment you described with contempt.

    “If you look at my building and some others very well, you will find that they have different shades of blocks. This is because the blocks were set at different intervals. In my own case, the foundation blocks stayed for more than two years before I raised the building to some point. After some time, I raised and roofed it, using tarpaulin and old roofing sheets to block some open places.

    “Cold and rain dealt with my family seriously while we were living in the tent. On many occasions, wind would blow part of it away in the night and we would have to stand in the rain to mend it.”

    Afolabi, a proud owner of a shanty one-room building located in Okoafon also on the Lagos-Badagry Expressway, is not bothered about what you think about his derelict house. What is important to him is that he has joined the league of landlords and now attends meetings with other landlords who have the best of houses in the area.

    “I am happy to have this building even though it is still at this level,” he said. “I am now a landlord and eternally delivered from the harassment of shylock house owners. It was a nightmare being a tenant, especially in the last house I lived in. The landlord was a thorn in my flesh. He was always complaining about everything and would seize every opportunity to extort money from his tenants.

    “He has three wives, and the moment any of them got pregnant, he would come and tell you he needed money to pay the hospital bills. After the wife puts to bed, he would come again and ask for money to help him take care of the baby and the mother. He does this not minding whether you owe him or not. If you are not owing, he would tell you to deduct it from the next rent. In short, his tenants were his ATM cards.

    “The annoying thing was that he never bothered to repair anything that got spoilt in the house. We always used our own resources to fix it.”

    But glad as he might be to be called a landlord, Afolabi said he had not been allowing his friends and relations to visit him for fear that they would mock him if they come.

    “How do you want me to bring them to this kind of place?” he queried. “I can’t do that because they will turn me to an object of ridicule. I don’t have a toilet yet. My family members and I do what is popularly called ‘short put’. We defecate in old newspapers or nylon bags and throw it into the bush. Is that what I will ask a friend or relation who visits to do? I will rather not invite them until I have a presentable house.

    A widow, Mrs Mojeed, who owns a room and a parlour in Ogijo, a suburb of Ogun State, savours the joy of being called a landlady. But the condition of the building in which she and her children live is not too different from that of a refugee camp. The rooms, like other hastily built houses, are without doors, causing the poor woman and her children to be exposed to harsh weather conditions.

    Her words: “I was living in Pedro area of Bariga (Lagos) before I moved to this place. I left Bariga after my landlord threw my family out of the house because we could not pay the high rent of N5, 000 per room.

    “When the landlord sent us out, we felt it was unwise to go and pay another rent with agency fee and commission. That was why we hurriedly came and erected a room and parlour here.

    “As you can see, we have no door or window. When rain falls, it comes into the house and messes up the whole place. If it is the type that comes with flood, we would have to stand on the bed for the rain to subside before coming down to drain the flood. The same thing happens during harmattan season. The cold wind comes in unhindered. All we do is to cover ourselves with wrappers.

    “We don’t have any form of security. We are daily exposed to all manner of dangers, but we always rely on God for protection. We didn’t really wish to have it this way but that is what the challenges of life have dropped on our laps.”

    The story of Oyerinde Mudasiru’s movement from Surulere, a highbrow part of Lagos, to Okeoko, a sleepy community in Ogijo, is simply befuddling.

    He said: “I moved from Surulere to Ikorodu because the rent became too much for me. After some time in Ikorodu, the rent also skyrocketed and I felt it was not wise to continue to labour all the year round only to pay a landlord. It was at this point that I decided to build a room on half a plot of land I had already acquired here in Okeoko.

    “I used sack and net to cover my door and window after constructing my one-room building. Mosquitoes, soldier ants and reptiles freely invaded my room. At a point, health officers came and gave us mosquito nets to save us from the menace of mosquitoes.

    “My neighbours and I have also been clearing the bush in the surrounding to prevent reptiles from coming into the house. We have been living in darkness all along as there is no electricity supply. We have contributed N60, 000 each for us to get power supply, but it was to no avail.

    “The government does not care about us except it is time for election. The road leading to this place wasn’t passable for vehicles until the Redeemed Christian Church of God headquarters, which is not far from us, took it upon themselves to fix it.”

    It was also a rough beginning for Najeem, who said he was forced out of his rented apartment by incessant flood.

    “When the menace of flood in my rented apartment at Ketu\Ikorodu Road became too much, I tried getting another apartment. But when I checked out the cost, I changed my mind and decided to use it to start something on my land here in Odogunyan.

    “We started with a wooden house and later began to build the house. It has been pretty challenging coping in this kind of condition. We don’t have a toilet. What we do from time to time is to dig holes and dump excreta in them. When that one is full, we dig another one.

    “We wake very early to bathe because we don’t have a bathroom. It is meaningless putting a bathroom in an open place where everybody passing will see us bathing. That is why we prefer to bathe early or late at night.

    “It is unfortunate that the government does not have plans for the poor to get loan to build houses. If they were providing loans, most of us would not suffer this much to have accommodation.”

    Challenging as their conditions are, the story of Mrs. Lateefat Fatai and others who moved from a one-room apartment to completing their houses offers some hope of a better tomorrow for the embattled landlords.

    She said: “My family was living at Ketu Alapere before we moved here. It was the same landlord palaver that drove us here. When our rent was increased to N7, 000 a room, we felt it was not worth it to continue to pay such when there are other bills. We decided to build a room and covered the door and window with sack. We managed like that until we added more rooms. Many people who started like that now have great buildings that one would never believe was like a rehabilitation home at the beginning.”

    In spite of her success story, she said: “Living in a remote area like this comes with a lot of challenges because it is we the residents that use our resources to develop the whole place. As we speak, there is no water supply. We go to long distances on a daily basis to buy water. Apart from that, living in this place has affected my business adversely. I sell soft drinks and sachet water but there is no power supply to make them cold. This makes people not to buy things the way they should.”

    Security, building, environmental experts speak

    In a telephone chat with our correspondent, the First Vice President of the Nigeria Institute of Building and the President of the Building Collapse Prevention Guild, Mr. Kunle Awobodu, expressed concern about the rate at which derelict buildings are mushrooming.

    “This question has been boggling our minds for long,” he said. “When you get to the suburbs of Lagos, you would see how ramshackle buildings are developing. Eventually, they will become a burden and an eyesore in future. So why can’t we get it right from the beginning? We have seen where a family slept in a ramshackle building overnight and the thing collapsed and killed them.

    “It is a complex social problem the government has not been able to find a solution to. When Mr Babatunde Fashola (SAN) was the governor of Lagos State, we advised him that the mortgage system that is operating in advanced countries should be introduced here, but the problem is how do we recover the money?

    “Our system has deficiency in seeing such facilities through. There is this programme by LAPO and Lafarge to help low income earners with money at low interest rate to build their own houses. It is called Ile Irorun. But how those people will pay back is another issue.”

    Awobodu further remarked that it is a contradiction to say that the government cannot build houses for people “when you hear that an individual who happened to be in government owns so many houses.

    “In advanced countries, especially the socialist countries, individuals don’t own houses, it is the government that builds for them. But Nigeria does not even have a data on who is who. So it is very complex to say you want to build for the people.”

    Explaining the security challenges associated with living in such structures, an expert on security matters, Ken Oziegbe, said: “People living in such structures are often soft targets for criminals. If you look critically at the people that were killed by the Badoo cult group in Ikorodu, you will find that the majority were people living in places like the picture you have painted.

    “There was this report published by your paper sometime last year about a community in Ijora where hoodlums were always raping and robbing people living in tents and other places that were not covered. That is what happens when people live in such places.

    “Criminals also like to do their operations with ease. We should also bear it in mind that criminals could use such suburbs as their hideouts. They wouldn’t want to spend so much on such building so that they could easily abandon it when the chips are down.”

    He added: “The government needs to up its game by providing befitting houses for the people. And where they cannot, they should be able to provide an enabling environment for the people to own houses.”

    An environmentalist, MrTaiwo Adewole, said people building houses without toilet and bathroom facilities are calling for serious epidemics within the society. “Unhealthy environment can easily lead to outbreaks of diseases,” he said, adding: “The government has a great role to play because they are the ones giving approval for the construction of buildings. Secondly, the local government, through its sanitation and health department, also has vital roles to play.

    “There is a need for massive awareness among people living in such areas. The best remedy from the government is to embark on building more public toilets and bathrooms which should be completely free of charge. The government also needs to start penalising the landlords of such facilities because the epidemic will be a major one which no one can escape from. Henceforth no building approval must be given without adequate toilets and bathrooms.”

    He added: “Some weeks back, I was at a community called Ajowa in Ajeromi/Ifelodun Local Government Area, and it was a real eyesore seeing people going to defecate in an open water body. And it was not even for free. ‘Area boys’ are the ones managing the open defecation place.

    “We can imagine the environmental and health impact because some people drink from the same water (where we have well and boreholes) closer to the water body and at the same time people still fish in the same water.

    “Finally, the owners of such buildings must be penalised for not following the building rules and regulations by erecting structures that lack toilets and bathroom facilities, which are basic sanitation requirements for every building.”

    Government moves to end menace

    The Federal Government during the week initiated the Nigeria Housing Fund Programme (NHFP), which is under the Social Investment Fund of the Federal Government. A sum of N100 billion was said to have been set aside for its take off.

    President of the Mortgage Bankers Association of Nigeria, and Managing Director, Trustbank Mortgage Ltd, Mr. Niyi Akinlusi, said the scheme was a departure from other housing schemes in Nigeria, adding: “The Housing Micro Finance Scheme is meant to stimulate increased lending to low-income earners in the formal and informal sectors in Nigeria through micro finance banks for incremental housing construction or housing improvement, while the technical assistance for the scheme shall ensure the protection of all the parties involved in the scheme.”

  • Vehicle runs into worshippers, kills three, injures others in Ogun

    Vehicle runs into worshippers, kills three, injures others in Ogun

    Three persons – two Muslim worshippers and a police officer, were on Friday killed and about a dozen of others injured when a truck carrying logs of wood  crashed into worshippers returning home after the Eid-El Kabir prayer in  Ijebu-Igbo, Ogun State.

    The Nation gathered that  the driver of the truck lost control of his wheel, veered off his lane  and dashed into the pedestrians’ side, killing the two worshippers on the spot while others sustained various degrees of injuries.

    The Nation learnt further that the incident touched off the ire of a mob who spared no time in bids to lynch the driver, but was rescued by Policemen from the Ijebu – Igbo Police Divisional Headquarters.

    However, one of the policemen, identified as Joseph Adejuwon  who participated in the rescue operation for the driver, was not that lucky : the angry mob clubbed him to death.

    An Operatives of the Federal Road Safety Corps(FRSC) who does not want to be identified by name said two pedestrians were killed on the spot.

    “I learnt the crash occurred with  a truck overrunning two worshippers at Ijebu igbo and killed the two of then  on the  spot. I learnt  mob (gathered) and  became irate even preventing security operatives access to the scene and FRSC advised by the Divisional Police Officer  to stay away  pending the time the situation will be under  control,” he said.

    Also, the Ogun State Police Public Relations Officer, Abimbola Oyeyemi, who has  confirmed the incident to reporters, said officer that was killed was an orderly to a Divisional Police Officer.

    Oyeyemi added that  the driver has been arrested.

     

  • US medical team offers free treatment in Ogun

    A team of medical practitioners from the United States is on a medical mission to Ogun State.

    The team headed by Musbau Kasumu, an indigene of Ayepe- Odogbolu Local Government of state, is screening, treating and conducting surgeries on residents  of Ayepe, Odogbolu   and  the  neighbouring communities

    The team consists of general practitioners, ophthalmologists, surgeons, orthopaedics, mental health specialists, family nurse practitioner, and an intensive unit registered nurse.

    The professionals have been using their yearly  holidays to prosecute the medical programme  in these communities free in the past 10 years.

    Speaking on the  challenges  o f  the programme, Kasumu  said: ’The challenges we face mostly are government cooperation, manpower, and equipment, some of our drugs and equipment are intercepted by the authority even when we have permission to bring them into the country’ Kasumu, a family health registered nurse, lamented

    ‘’The General Hospital in Ayepe, the venue of the treatment, is on the outskirts of the town. It  is in a dilapidated state, no equipment, no workers, ’’Kasumu lamented further.

    A  beneficiary  of  the yearly   medical programme, simply identified  as Alhaja  Adebayo said: ‘’ We wait patiently every year expecting Kasumu family to come home and treat us, we can’t use because they don’t have drugs, equipment and no workers to care for us; we travel to Ijebu-Ode and Shamu for treatment’. Kasumu said that he is inspired by the passion he has for people to have quality health care.

    He added: “Caring for people defines my existence as a provider in the United States, and it drives the passion that I have for human wellbeing as a whole.

  • Truck driver dies in Ogun multiple crash

    Truck driver dies in Ogun multiple crash

    One person was confirmed dead on Tuesday in a multiple accident, involving three trucks on the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway.

    The Public Relations Officer of the Ogun State Traffic Compliance and Enforcement Corps, Mr Babatunde Akinbiyi, confirmed the development.

    He told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abeokuta that the accident was caused by a driver of an Iveco truck who drove against traffic and rammed into two other trucks around 6:30 a.m.

    He said that the Iveco truck driver lost his life in the incident.

    “The accident involved a MAN diesel vehicle with registration number FST 893 XT, Iveco truck without a plate number and a DAF truck with registration number XG 189 MKA.

    “The Iveco truck driver who drove against traffic rammed into the other trucks in the early hours of the morning which resulted in the accident that claimed the life of the truck driver.”

    Akinbiyi said that the body of the driver had been deposited at the morgue of the Olabisi Onabanjo University Teaching Hospital in Sagamu.

  • ‘Ogun cooperative societies own N60b in asset’

    The Ogun State government has said the state has about 15,000 cooperative societies, with a cumulative asset of over N60 billion.

    The government said it would continue to create an enabling environment for cooperative societies to thrive for steady socioe-conomic growth and development.

    Commissioner, Community Development and Cooperatives Francis Gbenga spoke at a meeting also marking 100 days of Allied Afro-Cooperative Limited of the Old Students’ Association of African Church Grammar School in Abeokuta, the state capital, Governor Ibikunle Amosun’s alma mater.

    Gbenga hailed the cooperative societies, saying they have become better organised and efficient in disbursing loans.

    According to him, the era of signing and giving loans to members on “man know man” basis is gone because of an efficient monitoring process.

    He said the days  when few executives approve loans for friends were gone.

    The commissioner  advised executives of Allied Afro Cooperative Limited to stick to rules in running the society to ensure its growth, success and survival.

    Also, National President, Old Students Association, Adewale Olutayo and National  General Secretary, Mrs Tolu Onafowokan said the society was established to cater for “financial and material needs of members.”

  • Ogun discharges Lassa fever survivor

    Ogun State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Babatunde Ipaye, has said the 20-year-old boy diagnosed with Lassa fever has been discharged from the isolation centre at the Federal Medical Centre (FMC) at Idi-Aba in Abeokuta, the state capital.

    Ipaye, who addressing reporters at the centre in Abeokuta, said the boy was brought into the state hospital at Ijaye and was transferred to the isolation centre at FMC at Idi-Aba.

    The commissioner said the boy was taken to the centre with complications, adding that he had 20 per cent chances of survival because he had serious renal complication, which could have led to his death.

    He said: “Having being successfully treated and fully recovered from the disease, with results of the last two tests carried out, indicating negative, the boy was free to go home and join his family.”

    Ipaye stressed the need for continuous monitoring of the 106 persons currently being quarantined for having contacts with suspected patients.

    The commissioner said the state’s Department of Public Health would continue to monitor and guide against any likely infections.

  • FRSC commences Sallah special patrol in Ogun

    FRSC commences Sallah special patrol in Ogun

    The Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) in Ogun is to commence a special patrol between Aug. 30 to Sept. 6 to enhance free flow of traffic during the Sallah festivities.

    The Sector Commander of FRSC in the state, Mr Clement Oladele, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Sunday that the exercise would ensure safety of lives and reduce gridlocks across the state.

    NAN reports that the Muslim faithful would be celebrating the Eid-kabir on Sept. 1 and Sept. 2 across the country.

    According to Oladele, the FRSC would mobilise its personnel in ensuring that people travelling to different destinations across the state do not encounter hindrances.

    “We are going to join hands together to ensure that minimum obstructions were experienced across all principal corridors of the state.

    “The personnel would be deployed to areas like Lagos/Ibadan Expressway, Abeokuta, Sagamu, Ijebu-Ode, Odegbolu, Ogunmakin, Itori and Ota to curb excesses of drivers and reduce crashes to its barest level,” he said.

    Oladele, therefore, implored motorists to cooperate with the FRSC officials and adhere strictly to all the traffic regulations.

  • Man arrested for attempting to commit suicide over N50,000

    Man arrested for attempting to commit suicide over N50,000

    Security operatives in Ogun have arrested a man who allegedly attempted to commit suicide over his inability to refund a N50,000 ‘loan.

    The man  was arrested by  the Anti-Vandal Team of  Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), Ogun Command, while he was trying to  hang himself  in a bush on Ayetoro Road, Abeokuta.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) learnt that the man had tied a rope to a tree and was about hanging himself when a member of the NSCDC team saw him.

    The man, a 34-year old father of five, later told newsmen that  he worked with Traffic Compliance and  Enforcement Agency (TRACE) in Ogun but was sacked.

    He explained that his inability to perform his responsibility as the head of the family led  him to attempt suicide .

    He added that his failure to pay the ‘loan from LAPO,  a private micro-credit lending organisation, forced him to take the  decision to take his life.

    “I am a 200 level drop-out of Federal College of Education, Osiele, I dropped  out because I could not get financial assistance to continue.

    “Due to the health problem of my child in 2008, I had  to drop out  so that I could  have some money to take care of my sick child.

    “But, we later lost the child in 2009 because we were unable to pay some hospital bills after people had  helped us in raising money for the surgery.

    “I was duped  by some people and they even threatened  me which made me to leave Abeokuta for Akwa-Ibom state.

    ‘’It was when I came back after a year that I discovered I had been sacked from TRACE.

    “I am frustrated because am owing a lot of people ranging from house bill to  electricity bill and some other bills.

    “I am ashamed of myself because am not a responsible man, I cannot cater for my family as a head.

    “The LAPO officials  have used OPC (Odua Peoples Congress) to arrest my wife because of the money, if not for the help of my pastor.

    ” Am just frustrated because I have to pay N3,000 every Friday and I am presently jobless. And I still have like N24,000 to balance  .

    “What added to my conclusion to commit suicide was due to my inability to refund the ‘LAPO’ loan I collected when I wanted to start my tricycle business.

    ” The officials  of the LAPO have  been giving my family  tough times  for sometimes now because, I cannot afford to be repaying N3,000 every Friday, “he said.

    He, however, said he regretted his action and wanted a second chance in life./

    “I wish to go back to school; I want the government to help me with a job that can cater for my family and other things that are important, ” the man said.

    Meanwhile, the Public Relations Officer of NSCDC, Ogbonnaya Dyke   described it as a crime against the state for someone to try to take his life.

    Dyke  added that the suspect would be handed over to the police, after the NSCDC Intelligence Unit had concluded its work.

    “Since the matter is under our Crisis Management Team, we have to swing into action to address the situation.

    “Necessary actions will be taken by the Corps in addressing the situation. He is going to be handed over to the police after our intelligence Unit has done its work, ” he said.

  • Ogun harmonises tolls for heavy duty vehicles

    Ogun harmonises tolls for heavy duty vehicles

    The Ogun government has harmonised ‎tolls and levies payable on trucks, trailers and other heavy duty vehicles which convey raw materials and finished goods within the state.

    The state’s Commissioner for Finance, Mr Adewale Oshinowo stated this on Thursday in Abeokuta at a news conference.

    Oshinowo said that the development followed calls by members of the organised private sector operating in the state.

    According to him, the step became necessary to ease the process of payment and check the illegal ‎and indiscriminate activities of touts, who swindle manufacturers.

    “The state government has now designed and approved customised stickers to transporters and manufacturers .

    “Cumbersome nature of the former method where transporters and manufacturers had to pay to ministries separately at numerous toll points hinders growth of business”, he said.

    He said in addition, the new process makes possible proper documentation and easy payment due to the establishment of a one-stop shop for all fees and charges payable by transporters to Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) of government.

    “The harmonised toll regime will have new designated toll points across the 20 local governments and 37 Local Council Development Areas (LCDAs) in ‎the state.

    “Officials of the ministries of Agriculture, Environment, Forestry and Commerce are presently on evaluation tour of the existing toll points across the state.

    “Their reports will be used to determine the new toll points of the harmonised regime,” he said.

    The Commissioner added that the state had also designed special package for corporate organisations that might prefer to make quarterly, biannual or annual payments.

  • Ogun to harmonise toll collection

    Ogun to harmonise toll collection

    The Ogun State government has commenced an evaluation process that will ensure a one-stop shop for all fees and charges by its Ministries, Departments and Agencies.

    This is to harmonise toll collection and curb indiscriminate toll points for proper documentation and easy payment process for corporate organisations and individuals.

    While speaking on the development at his office in Abeokuta, Commissioner for Finance Adewale Oshinowo explained that the cumbersome nature of the existing payment methods where payers had to pay each ministry separately at numerous toll points was unconventional.

    He said the proposed harmonisation plan when it becomes operational, would enable payers to make all payments at designated points across the Local Government or Local Council Development Areas (LCDAs) of the State as the case may be, after which a sticker indicating non-indebtedness would be given to them to be placed on the wind-screen.

    Oshinowo explained further that a more convenient package has been designed for corporate organisations that might want to pay quarterly or bi-annually.

    “Ogun State is now the preferred choice for business location, so we cannot afford to do things the old way. The new system of toll payment will further ease the movement of raw materials and finished products from and into the State without delay at toll points,’’ Oshinowo said.

    He disclosed that officers from all toll collecting ministries had embarked on evaluation of all existing toll points to identify their challenges and proffer possible solutions, saying in due course, approved toll points would be made available to the public and security agents

    “Officers from the Ministries of Agric, Environment, Forestry and Commerce are presently on evaluation tour to all the existing toll points across the State. Their report will be used in identifying the points for the new harmonized system’’, he explained.